Modern living in the 1960s: ‘Mad Men’ themes are topical

NEW YORK — In its first two seasons, “Mad Men” rang true, and familiar, from across a half-century divide.

As this masterful AMC drama resumes (now in mid-1963), viewers will feel, like never before, the bond between our time and the past as “Mad Men” vividly evokes it.

The series is a yeasty blend of hopes, anxiety, delusions and disgruntlement. In 2009, we know how that goes.

There are shake-ups and layoffs at New York’s Sterling Cooper advertising agency, which, late last season, was taken over by a British ad firm.

“Is that the last of it?” says Don Draper, the agency’s creative director, to his partners after they’ve sacked another colleague. “’Cause I don’t like how much I’m getting used to these.”

Meanwhile, the Baltimore-based maker of London Fog raincoats is fretting that everyone who needs a raincoat has already bought one. But Draper, angling to land this account, is ready with reassurance.

“There will be fat years, and there will be lean years,” he says. “But it is going to rain.”

He speaks with authority. The magnetic yet tormented Draper (series star Jon Hamm) seems always to be weathering some personal tempest. No matter how sharp he looks in a raincoat, or any garb, it isn’t enough to keep those forces at bay.

The world keeps spinning on “Mad Men,” as today, with an escalating sense that massive changes lurk at the horizon. And not only devastation, though doomsday was just barely averted at the end of last season with a peaceful resolution of the U.S-Russia missile crisis of October 1962.

As the new season begins (Sunday, 10 p.m.), Don’s wife, Betty (January Jones), with whom he has a lonely marriage beneath a lovely veneer, is nine months pregnant with their third child.

Skirt-chasing agency partner Roger Sterling (John Slattery) still professes to be happy with his fianc e, a former secretary at the agency who is less than half his age. The family he dumped to be with her isn’t so happy.

And in an episode soon, marijuana finds its way into an office of the traditionally gin- and bourbon-soaked Sterling Cooper!

As before, “Mad Men” unfolds defiantly brooding, wryly witty, at chosen moments heartbreaking. The saga goes its own way, and therefore seems to be missing any obvious plot lines (in fact, it’s avoiding any obvious formula). There are numerous scenes, and yet the action moves at a deliberative, cushiony pace.

The dialogue is smart but sparse.

“I’m engaged,” says the airline stewardess seducing Don Draper on a business trip. “On the other hand, you might be my last chance.”

“I’ve been married a long time,” replies Draper. “You get plenty of chances.”

There are no easy answers here, even fewer easy questions. Whiny account executive Pete Campbell (Vincent Kartheiser) erupts with a doozy of a question to his wife when he discovers that his promotion wasn’t quite what he expected: “Why does it always have to be like this? Why can’t I get anything good all at once?”

There’s no answer to that — short of giving Pete a slap.

A past winner of Emmy, Peabody and Golden Globe awards, “Mad Men” continues to blaze new ground. But it’s also a throwback that, from today’s vantage point, seems extravagant, inefficient, even inconvenient for viewers who prefer pat TV fare.

Like its period trappings, “Mad Men” is a bullet brassiere. A shiny, V-8 American sedan. A two-martini business lunch.

“Mad Men” is TV, back when TV ruled. It’s a glorious display of TV storytelling, delivered in the Internet age with television on a downward slide, bleeding money and mojo.